Sunday, April 15, 2012

#MI6 Heywood Murder : Bo Xilia -FRAMED - Whenever David Cameron Has His Corrupt Sleazy Dabs ON Anything Rest Assured A Patsy Has Been Found !

For anyone wishing to know just how corrupt David Cameron is, simply Google his connections with Rupert Murdoch, Rebekah Brooks , Andy Coulson along with the racist corrupt MET, Scotland Yard. ALL of whom, if there was any justice in England would be behind bars for the rest of their lives.

So dig deeper for the answer's because with Cameron involved there is always corruption, cover-ups and Cameron ALWAYS assists where a frame-up is concerned.

One example of David Cameron corruption and the lies he tells his people. Remember he is an unelected Prime Minister no one actually voted for him!

Last Friday some AlJazeera journalists quit the newspaper due to their support of the American quest to invade Syria. Cameron has in place a complete media blackout on this information. Cameron's British media are still reporting blatant lies that ASSAD is killing children when the truth is here at this link.

You don’t often get a good murder mystery playing out at the top reaches of the Communist Party of China. Not in real life, anyway. But the Bo Xilai affair is the real deal: a tale of intrigue, duplicity, betrayal and now an official murder investigation, involving one of the hottest young rising stars in the Beijing political firmament and his equally ambitious wife.
Bo has been ousted from his party posts and his wife, Gu Kailai, is being held “along with an employee of the Bo household” on suspicion of involvement in the murder of a British businessman. According to Xinhua, the official party paper, the two are “highly suspected” of the crime of “intentional homicide,”in the death of Neil Heywood, once a friend and confidante.
The New York Times called it the “biggest political scandal to hit China’s Communist Party in a generation.”

Not since the purges after the crackdown on democracy protests in 1989 has the Chinese leadership been exposed to so much turmoil. Excruciatingly for top officials, who prize unity and secrecy above all, this one involves foreigners in an embarrassingly intrusive way — both the death of a British citizen and also the attempt by a senior police official to seek American asylum.
That official, Wang Lijun, a onetime close aide to Mr. Bo who was himself under investigation for corruption, fled to the consulate of the United States in Chengdu in February and spent more than 30 hours there. He said Mr. Heywood had been poisoned and revealed what he knew about the death — and about jockeying for power inside the country’s closed political system, several people briefed on the matter said.

The Wall Street Journal,which calls Ms. Gu “the Jackie Kennedy of China”, said the crisis comes at a uniquely bad time for the communist leadership, combining a political catastrophe with a public relations disaster.

The prospect of homicide charges in the downfall of a Chinese power couple, both children of revolutionary heroes, quashes the party’s hopes that a once-a-decade leadership transition will go smoothly and cracks the carefully constructed facade of unity that is essential to its rule.

The scandal began with a falling out between Mr. Bo and Mr. Wang, who caused acute embarrassment to Beijing when he sought U.S. help in fleeing the country in February. Until then, Bo had been considered one of the party’s bright lights, a charismatic politician who served as party leader in Chongqing province — where he led a much-praised crackdown on crime — and was destined for bigger things.
Then Mr. Heywood’s body was found in a hotel room in Chongqing, and the talk began.The death was initially blamed on “alcohol-poisoning,” though Mr. Heywood’s friends said he was never a big drinker. His relatives said they’d been told he died of a heart attack. The body was cremated without their consent or an autopsy.
Heywood had been known as a close aid and friend to Bo and his wife. British papers have been agog at the scandal, which offers such juicy details they don’t even have to make them up. The Daily Mailreported that Bo’s celebrated crime campaign was little more than a reign of terror.

Critics called his clampdown, launched in 2009, the ‘red terror’, saying state security apparatus were allowed to act with impunity: framing victims, extracting confessions through torture, extorting business empires and visiting retribution on Mr Bo’s political rivals.
… In 10 months, 4,781 people were arrested, including business executives, police officers, judges, legislators and others accused of running or protecting criminal syndicates, according to the New York Times. Chongqing’s top justice official was even found to have buried $3 million under a fish pond, during the crackdown.

In a profile of Bo’s wife, theFinancial Times identifies her as a “hard-charging lawyer from a well-connected family.”

Ms Gu’s background and career reveal a woman who was at times incredibly successful and at others battled with depression. Born to privileged parents who were both revolutionary heroes, Ms Gu grew up during the Cultural Revolution and had to fend for herself after her parents and four older sisters were jailed. During that time the young Kailai, whose name means “embrace the future”, dropped out of elementary school and worked as a bricklayer and as a butcher, according to biographical accounts on state-run websites.To improve her circumstances she took up the pipa, a four-stringed Chinese lute, and her musical talent won her a spot in the Beijing Film Orchestra. She even recorded the soundtrack for a documentary film about Communist leader Mao Zedong, considered a great honour at the time.
The lute brought Ms Gu to her future husband Mr Bo in 1984, when she travelled to the small prefecture where he was party secretary for an arts project. The couple were soon married and their son Bo Guagua was born in 1987, shortly before they moved to Dalian.

Ms. Gu continued her career after her son’s birth, and sometimes identified herself in English by the name Horus, the Egyptian god of war. She achieved her greatest fame after winning a case for a Chinese company in U.S. court, and then writing a book about it. The book Uphold Justice in America, became a popular TV show in which Ms. Gu was portrayed as a determined and relentless battler for justice. She eventually quit her career and, according to reports, has been suffering increasing bouts of depression and paranoia.
China’s rulers are desperate to rid themselves of the affair, which sparked a surge of commentary on Chinese social networks. Xinhua’s online edition noted that Mr. Bo’s successors in Chongqing are 100% in support of Beijing’s actions.

All members of the Standing Committee of the CPC Chongqing Municipal Committee have reached the agreement that the CPC Central Committee’s decision fully displays the respect for fact and rule of law. The cadres and masses in Chongqing said they have observed the CPC Central Committee’s determination to safeguard Party discipline and the country’s laws.“I will resolutely support the CPC Central Committee’s decision,” said Xia Yang, chief procurator with the People’s Procuratorate of Yuzhong district in Chongqing. There is no privileged citizen before the law. No one can interfere with law enforcement and anyone who violates the law can not be at large. The leading cadres of the CPC should set an example to obey the law and accept supervision consciously, Xia said.

As other politicians have learned, however, once a scandal is loose, it’s very hard to corral it again.
National Post